“Blessed is the man who trusts in the LORD, whose hope
is the LORD.” Jeremiah 17:7
Today’s startlingly vivid readings give us insight
into the fundamental nature of choice, viz. the choice of trust. We
begin by seeing from the first reading the stark terms in which Jeremiah
categorizes humans: those with trust in the Lord, and those without.
The imagery that he evokes is one of fertility vs. sterility, of growth
vs. stagnation and decay. It is interesting that this choice of trust
is then concluded with the Lord stating that to each will come recompense
“according to the merit of his deeds.” God expects this
choice of trusting in Him to become the cause of our good merits and
deeds and our evil merits to be the effect of a repugnant distrust in
Him
In the Gospel, Jesus provides a clear example of this dichotomy in trust.
On one hand, we have Lazarus, a diseased man of poverty, who, in death,
finds himself in the “bosom of Abraham.” On the other lies
the rich man, a person of luxury who finds himself in “torment.”
Can these statuses of eternal life and death be attributed to trust
in God?
The man cries out to Abraham for himself and then for
his family. It is here that we find Abraham’s words most potent:
“They have Moses and the prophets. Let them listen to them.”
So, the man was indeed aware of the laws, the Will of the Lord, which
he broke: that the hungry might be fed, clothed, and sheltered, amongst
many more things.
What motivation, then, can be surmised for the rich
man’s refusal to comply with the Lord’s law? It is undoubtedly
his lack of trust. Were he to have trusted in God, he would have eagerly
shown a willingness to be in union with the Lord and His designs, e.g.,
tending to Lazarus’ corporeal needs. Instead, however, the rich
man placed his trust “in flesh” as Jeremiah states in the
first reading, and this free choice of false trust led to his eternal
decay.
In our own lives, how often do we put trust “in
flesh?” Is it money? politicians? social programs? education?
our own will and desire? No, all are fleeting: none is eternal. Only
God the Rock will satisfy our need to trust, for only He can guarantee
our growth, fertility, and life.
As we continue in this season of Lent, let us pray that
we may have total trust and faith in Our Lord and implement, so that,
as Jeremiah reminds us, we may be reward eternally with God by the merits
of our deeds.
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